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Saturday, May 3, 2025

1970 Army Mutiny, 50 years lat­er...

Shah recalls role in revolution

by

Soyini Grey
1839 days ago
20200420

“My great­est dis­ap­point­ment is the youth, mean­ing that when you see the lev­el of crime that has over­pow­ered the young peo­ple, and that so many of them have be­come crim­i­nals.”

Raf­fique Shah knows of which he speaks when he ex­press­es his dis­ap­point­ment with our young peo­ple. At 24, he was a lieu­tenant in the Trinidad & To­ba­go Reg­i­ment, with two years of mil­i­tary train­ing at the RMA Sand­hurst: “the na­tion­al cen­tre of ex­cel­lence for lead­er­ship.”

In 1970, the world was awash in rev­o­lu­tion. Young peo­ple were march­ing against Viet­nam, and Caribbean stu­dents oc­cu­pied the ninth floor of the St. George Williams Uni­ver­si­ty in Cana­da to protest a racist pro­fes­sor. That in­ci­dent in­spired stu­dents at UWI to march from St. Au­gus­tine to Port-of-Spain in sol­i­dar­i­ty. An ac­tion that sparked what be­come to be known as the Black Pow­er Move­ment.

Shah says that ac­tion and oth­ers that were hap­pen­ing here were more than just Black Pow­er, it was Peo­ple Pow­er.

“It was dif­fi­cult for us to es­cape that here once one was in­tel­li­gent, one was think­ing, and one had a sense of jus­tice for the peo­ple in this coun­try,” he says.

He and his col­leagues felt they had no choice. If the peo­ple were caught up in the winds of nec­es­sary so­cial change, then they in the de­fense force, had to be pre­pared to pro­tect the peo­ple from the es­tab­lish­ment, which was threat­ened by their ac­tion.

They felt so strong­ly about this that they were will­ing “to put their lives on the line to en­sure that the gov­ern­ment did not use them against the mass­es.”

That was the foun­da­tion up­on which they built their mutiny. Shah and his com­pa­tri­ots re­volt­ed to pre­vent them­selves from be­ing used as tools by the gov­ern­ment to sup­press the peo­ple. The three lead­ers: Shah, Michael Bazie and Rex La Salle, were al­so hu­man­ists, and de­spite be­ing trained in war­fare, they did not want to shed the blood of their fel­low coun­try­men. So when the Coast Guard was used to block their at­tempt to leave the bar­racks in Tetron for Port-of-Spain they re­treat­ed. They re­mained there for 10 days be­fore they sur­ren­dered.

They were court-mar­tialed and Shah giv­en a sen­tence of 30 years. He on­ly spent 27 months in jail be­cause he won his ap­peal. They all did.

De­spite the an­ti-cli­mat­ic end, he is proud of his ac­tion, though per­haps a bit brash, it was part of a se­ries of events with­in the Black Pow­er Move­ment, or Rev­o­lu­tion, that had a last­ing im­pact. “It forced the gov­ern­ment of Er­ic Williams, Dr Er­ic Williams to take cer­tain mea­sures that yield­ed vic­to­ry of sorts by bring­ing the colour ques­tion to the ta­ble,” Shah says. In the years since op­por­tu­ni­ties that had been pre­vi­ous­ly blocked to cit­i­zens be­cause of their colour were opened. From beau­ty pageants to bank­ing, open­ing the door for Janelle Pen­ny Com­mis­siong to be­come the first black women to win the Miss Uni­verse Pageant in 1977.

For Shah, the lessons of Black Pow­er still res­onate to­day. He re­mains proud of the 24-year-old who had the courage to stand up for what he be­lieved in. That he and his com­pa­tri­ots were able to have val­ues they stood firm to, de­spite the con­se­quences: ar­rest, court-mar­tial, and come out on the oth­er side to ef­fect pos­i­tive change in this coun­try.

Which is why he is so dis­ap­point­ed in our youth. He says in 1970 na­tion­al un­em­ploy­ment was around 15 per cent, but youth un­em­ploy­ment was as high as 25 per cent. He says now is the time for young peo­ple to show their pa­tri­o­tism, their in­tel­li­gence, and get in­volved in ac­tion to change the sta­tus quo. Shah says he and his men felt a re­spon­si­bil­i­ty to give back to the peo­ple be­cause it was their tax dol­lars that sent them to Sand­hurst. Which is why they were in­volved in plans to cre­ate a se­ries of youth camps that were sup­posed to lead to vo­ca­tion­al, and pos­si­bly Army Re­serve train­ing for na­tion­als. It nev­er ma­te­ri­alised.

He re­mains a crit­ic of the way the De­fense Force is used, or not used. Trot­ted out on­ly for most­ly cer­e­mo­ni­al func­tions. He says these are some of the most high­ly trained peo­ple in the coun­try, they should be used more of­ten to of­fer as­sis­tance reg­u­lar­ly not just in times of cri­sis, as we are in cur­rent­ly fight­ing to ward off the spread of the nov­el coro­n­avirus, but they can be used in tech­ni­cal, so­cial and com­mu­ni­ty-based ac­tion.

As he said in 1990 at the UWI’s Black Pow­er Con­fer­ence, and again dur­ing this in­ter­view, the Army should be in­te­grat­ed in­to this so­ci­ety. It should be re­moved from “non-es­sen­tial guard du­ties” and be al­lowed to work more close­ly with cit­i­zens, not apart from them.


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